gcc-pass1-inst.xml 4.9 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111
  1. <sect2><title>&nbsp;</title><para>&nbsp;</para></sect2>
  2. <sect2>
  3. <title>Installation of GCC</title>
  4. <para>We won't be needing a C++ compiler until Chapter 6. So, only
  5. the gcc-core tarball needs to be unpacked at this time.</para>
  6. <para>This package is known to behave badly when you have changed its
  7. default optimization flags (including the -march and -mcpu options).
  8. Therefore, if you have defined any environment variables that override
  9. default optimizations, such as CFLAGS and CXXFLAGS, we recommend unsetting
  10. or modifying them when building GCC.</para>
  11. <para><screen><userinput>patch -Np1 -i ../gcc-&gcc-version;-mmap_test.patch
  12. patch -Np1 -i ../gcc-&gcc-version;-no_fixincludes.patch</userinput></screen></para>
  13. <para>It is recommended by the GCC installation documentation to build
  14. GCC outside of the source directory in a dedicated directory:</para>
  15. <para><screen><userinput>mkdir ../gcc-build
  16. cd ../gcc-build</userinput></screen></para>
  17. <para>Prepare GCC to be compiled:</para>
  18. <para><screen><userinput>CFLAGS="-O2 -pipe" \
  19. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;../gcc-&gcc-version;/configure --prefix=/stage1 \
  20. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;--with-local-prefix=/stage1 \
  21. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;--disable-nls --enable-shared \
  22. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;--enable-languages=c</userinput></screen></para>
  23. <para>The meaning of the configure options are:</para>
  24. <itemizedlist>
  25. <listitem><para><userinput>--prefix=/static</userinput>: This is NOT a
  26. typo. GCC hard codes some paths while compiling and so we need to pass
  27. <filename class="directory">/static</filename> as the prefix during the
  28. configure stage. We will pass the real installation prefix (<filename
  29. class="directory">$LFS/static</filename>) during the installation
  30. stage later on.</para></listitem>
  31. <listitem><para><userinput>--disable-shared</userinput>: This prevents the
  32. build of dynamic libraries. They are useless to us at the moment. We'll
  33. create them when we reinstall GCC in chapter 6.</para></listitem>
  34. <listitem><para><userinput>--with-as=$LFS/static/bin/as and
  35. --with-ld=$LFS/static/bin/ld</userinput>: GCC can be miscompiled if your
  36. host distribution's Binutils package is quite old. We need a good working
  37. static GCC until we reinstall GCC later in chapter 6. So by using
  38. <filename>as</filename> and <filename>ld</filename> from the Binutils
  39. package we compiled earlier in this chapter we ensure that GCC will work
  40. correctly.</para></listitem>
  41. </itemizedlist>
  42. <para>Continue with compiling the package:</para>
  43. <para><screen><userinput>make BOOT_LDFLAGS="-static -s" \
  44. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;BOOT_CFLAGS="-O2 -pipe" \
  45. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;STAGE1_CFLAGS="-pipe" bootstrap</userinput></screen></para>
  46. <para>The meaning of the make options are:</para>
  47. <itemizedlist>
  48. <listitem><para><userinput>BOOT_LDFLAGS="-static"</userinput>: This is
  49. GCC's equivalent to make LDFLAGS="-static" as we use with other packages to
  50. compile them statically.</para></listitem>
  51. <listitem><para><userinput>bootstrap</userinput>: The
  52. <emphasis>bootstrap</emphasis> target doesn't just compile GCC, but it
  53. compiles GCC a second time. It uses the first compiled programs to compile
  54. itself a second and third time to make sure the compiler was compiled properly
  55. and can compile itself properly.</para></listitem>
  56. </itemizedlist>
  57. <para>And finish off installing the package:</para>
  58. <para><screen><userinput>make install</userinput></screen></para>
  59. <para>The meaning of the make option is:</para>
  60. <itemizedlist>
  61. <listitem><para><userinput>install-no-fixedincludes</userinput>: This prevents
  62. the fixincludes script from running. Preventing this is necessary because
  63. under normal circumstances the GCC installation will run the fixincludes
  64. script which scans your system for header files that need to be fixed. It
  65. might find that the Glibc header files of your host system need to be fixed.
  66. If so, it will fix them and put them in
  67. <filename>$LFS/static/lib/gcc-lib/i686-pc-linux-gnu/3.2</filename>. Later on
  68. in chapter 6 you will install Glibc which will put its header files in
  69. <filename>/usr/include</filename>. Next you will install other programs that
  70. use the Glibc headers and GCC will look in
  71. <filename>/static/lib/gcc-lib</filename> before looking in
  72. <filename>/usr/include</filename>, with the result of finding and using the
  73. fixed Glibc header files from your host distribution, which are probably
  74. incompatible with the Glibc version actually used on the LFS
  75. system.</para></listitem>
  76. </itemizedlist>
  77. <para>As the finishing touch we'll create the <filename
  78. class="symlink">$LFS/static/bin/cc</filename> symlink. A lot of programs
  79. and scripts try to run <userinput>cc</userinput> instead of
  80. <userinput>gcc</userinput> This is to keep programs generic and usable on
  81. all kinds of Unix systems. Not everybody has GNU CC installed. Just running
  82. <userinput>cc</userinput> (C Compiler) leaves the user free to decide which
  83. C compiler to install. The symlink will point to the system's default
  84. compiler.</para>
  85. <para><screen><userinput>ln -sf gcc /stage1/bin/cc</userinput></screen></para>
  86. </sect2>